Massive icing due to the weather conditions and a deep stall, it's certainly possible. Especially if their air data computer isn't working properly due to icing and they're in IMC and can't tell what the plane is really doing since the instruments aren't reliable. Remember, these pilots are trained to not trust their "butt feeling" in IMC and trust the instruments. When the instruments go bad, what do you do?
Here's the "Official Statement" on what they've found -
http://www.bea.aero/fr/enquetes/vol.af. ... 011.en.pdfThe indications seem to be that they had an air data computer failure due to icing on the pitot and static sensors (as believed previously) and then they stalled and tried to "pull out" of a dive they weren't in, which makes you wonder what the PFD was or wasn't showing because if it was fully failed or indicating incorrectly for some reason, it would explain trying to pull out of a dive due to lack of visual reference but being that they use solid-state gyroscopic devices, I don't know how the two items would go together (icing and failure of the attitude reference instruments). It will be interesting to see the entire report, but it certainly looks like the pilots either suffered from spatial disorientation or they just lost all instruments and had no way of really knowing what the plane was doing until it was too late.
BTW, I think this accidentally got put in the wrong forum.
